Pile driving for constructing offshore wind turbine supports alters feeding behaviors of longfin squid

With the offshore wind industry expanding in the United States and elsewhere, a new study raises questions about how the noise from impact pile driving to install turbine supports can affect feeding behaviors of longfin squid, a commercially and ecologically important cephalopod.,, The study addressed short-term impacts to squid feeding behavior and noted that future research should look at longer exposures to noise and field work with  free-swimming squid. In particular, the study found that rates of anti-predator behaviors were similar when subjected to recordings of piledriving whether the squid was hunting at the start of the noise, suggesting that the noise diverted squid attention from a feeding task toward predator defense. >click to read< 14:13

‘Irreversible losses’: Wildlife expert fears for North Sea habitat – The North Sea off Suffolk could be facing “irreversible wildlife losses” because of the impact on its environment of the growing number of windfarms. >click to read<

2 Responses to Pile driving for constructing offshore wind turbine supports alters feeding behaviors of longfin squid

  1. Dick Grachek says:

    Not only pile driving noise, but what about the Electromagnetic fields from hundreds of millions of watts running through a filigree of feed and trunk lines covering the bottom. The proposed wind farm off of Martha’s Vineyard is on the single most important Squid spawning grounds on the East Coast.

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